Bindery

Bindery is the last step in most projects and you depend on us to do the job right and to meet your deadline needs. Because we know that proper finishing gives your brand image that professional and polished look, our experienced staff promises to provide consistent quality and quick turn around.

Dobb Printing

Polar Paper Cutter

MBO Folders Continuous Feed (6) Machines

Muller Martini Stitcher Trimmers (2) Machines

Rollem Scoring/Perforating

Drilling

Shrink Wrapping

Paper Binding

Bindery Processes

Cutting and trimming

Paper stock may need to be cut or trimmed more than once during the production of a job:

Sometimes the paper that is in stock is too big and needs to be trimmed prior to printing a job.

When multiple signatures are combined on one press sheet, those sheets need to be cut after printing.

Sheets may need to be trimmed to fit folding machines or other bindery equipment.

After folding and binding the unbound sides need to be trimmed. For books, this is often done with a three-knife cutter, which has three blades to simultaneously trim three sides.

Cutting and trimming are usually done using a guillotine cutter. A stack of sheets is placed on the bed of the cutter and the angled stainless steel blade cuts through it at the desired position. All the stacks are subsequently often placed in a jogger, a vibrating table that squares the stacks of sheets.

Folding

For magazines, books,… large press sheets need to be folded into signatures. This involves a series of right-angle folds in which the sheet is folded multiple times. Folding a sheet once makes four pages, two right-angle folds make eight pages,…

Other types of work require parallel folds in which two or more folds which are oriented in the same direction are made in a sheet. This is typically done for leaflets or brochures. Some common types of folds are:

the half fold

the accordion fold

the gatefold

the French fold

the letter fold

There are two common types of folding machines: the knife folder, also known as a right-angle folder, and the buckle folder. In general knife folders are used for heavier stocks, while buckle folders are used for lighter paper types.

Collating and gathering

These processes involve placing (folded) sheets in the correct sequence. Collating refers to sorting individual sheets into sets. Many laser printers and copiers have a collating function. Gathering is a similar process but it involves folded signatures. Gathering machines have up to thirty slots or pockets in which signatures are fed manually or automatically. The machine then gathers the signatures into what is known as a book block. Such machines can also have a binding function, such as for instance a stitcher.

Binding

There are different ways of binding sheets together. Below are the most commonly used techniques:

Perfect binding: Pages are fixed to a cover or spine using glue. This process is used for paperback books, magazines, telephone guides,…

Saddle-stitching: Pages are bound by driving staples through the center of the spine of folded sheets. This wire binding technique is commonly used for magazines, newsletters, small catalogs,… but is limited in the number of pages that can be bound.

Side-stitching: This type of wire binding is less common than saddle-stitching. The staples are driven through the pages, usually parallel to the bind margin. Reports are often bound this way.

Spiral binding: A continuous wire or plastic coil is threaded through holes drilled or punched into a stack of sheets. Spiral binding is typically used for notebooks.

Loose-leaf binding: A set of holes is drilled in a stack of sheets which are then inserted into standard or customized ring binders or post binders. This binding technique is used for notebooks, presentations, financial reports, manuals or any other type of publication that require frequent updating.

Padding: the binding of a stack of sheets using a flexible adhesive so that the sheets can easily be removed. Notepads are a typical example of padding.